Great news I hear you shout but you know what I am diabetic , I may be in a sort of remission BUT to say that I'm no longer a diabetic isn't right .
I don't want to be told I'm not a diabetic , I've go no will power , I only do low carb because I don't want to feel **** and doing low carb stops me feeling ****.
I am proud that I have the knowledge and skills to control my BS, I also know that if I eat high carb for any length of time my BS spikes .
I think it depends on your GP practice - my hba1c has been between 36 and 38 for over three years but I've been told by my DN that, once a diabetic always a diabetic whereas my work colleague had a hba1c of 40 for one year and was told that he was no longer diabetic.Great stuff, I wish that my GP would say the same.
It has been 6 months now with readings all in the non diabetic range (mean FBG 4.5, all 2 hour pp readings under 6.0, usually under 5.0) with no meds at all. Even high carb meals like pasta or porridge appear to have little or no effect. HbA1c now 32.
However, apparently I am diabetic for life whatever readings I get. Nothing, of course, to do with extra cash GPs receive for diabetic patients,
Thanks everyone . It's not easy , I've said a thousand times that I'm human and go off the rails . My Gran and Dad were both type 2 , they both ended up on insulin when they got older . I'm still diet and activity controlled.
I disagree with my GP , I am still a diet controlled diabetic person. I'm a sensible person who has knowledge of diabetes , my worry is for people who don't have my knowledge and get told the same thing , will they go back to old eating habits ?
Hi Jamrox - Great result.
I remember you doing your goal setting exercise a while back, and thinking how organised you are.
I have been removed from the diabetes register at my surgery. I didn't ask for it, but agreed to it, when it was suggested. To be honest, I agreed to it to stop all those outrageous conversations where the words, ".... that'll be due to your diabetes....", feature. You know the ones I mean - everything from a cold to the plague becoming attributable.
I still have an annual HbA1c, have my retinopathy scan, and have access to my doc and so on. The only thing I don't routinely have is a formal review, but I do that with myself from time to time, and nor do I have my feet checked. But I only once had had my feet checked during the time I was on the register, and I paid for that, just after diagnosis (I as going abroad for a few moths and wanted it done.)
I haven't found coming off the register has made me complacent, in fact, I might say it has done the reverse. Whilst the vast majority of people are either very pleased for me, or disinterested (in the scheme of things), some are just waiting for me to trip up and for it all to go terribly wrong. I'm sure we all have someone like that in our lives?
The last thing I'll be doing is proving them right, without a good fight!
Again congratulations on doing so well. Whilst I always say that diabetes isn't a solo sport (in that it inevitably impacts those close to us as well as ourselves), only we can do the work to turn in the results.
Congestion Moderator that's great . Yes I have people who would love me to slip up , why are people like that.
I still get people who automatically think it's all my fault too , even though my Gran and my Dad were type 2 and they ate reasonably healthy ( not a lot of processed food in their days).
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